3 resultados para Self-determined learning strategies

em Instituto Politécnico de Bragança


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Virtual learning environments (VLEs) have witnessed a high evolution, namely regarding their potentialities, the tools and the activities they provide. VLEs enable us to access large quantities of data resulting from both students and teachers’ activities developed in those environments. Monitoring undergraduates’ activities in VLEs is important as it allows us to showcase, in a structured way, a number of indicators which may be taken into account to understand the learning process more deeply and to propose improvements in the teaching and learning strategies as well as in the institution’s virtual environment. Although VLEs provide several data sectorial statistics, they do not provide knowledge regarding the institution’s evolution. Therefore, we consider the analysis of the activity logs in VLEs over a period of five years to be paramount. This paper focuses on the analysis of the activities developed by students in a virtual learning environment, from a sample of undergraduate students, approximately 7000 per year, over a period of five academic years, namely from 2009/2010 to 2013/2014. The main aims of this research work are to assess the evolution of activity logs in the virtual learning environment of a Portuguese public higher education institution, in order to fill possible gaps and to hold out the prospect of new forms of use of the environment. The results obtained from the data analysis show that overall, the number of accesses to the virtual learning environment increased over the five years under study. The most used tools were Resources, Messages and Assignments. The most frequent activities developed with these tools were respectively consulting information, sending messages and submitting assignments. The frequency of accesses to the virtual learning environment was characterized according to the number of accesses in the activity log. The data distribution was divided into five frequency categories named very low, low, moderate, high and very high, determined by the percentiles 20, 40, 60, 80 and 100, respectively. The study of activity logs of virtual learning environments is important not only because they provide real knowledge of the use that undergraduates make of these environments, but also because of the possibilities they create regarding the identification of a need for new pedagogical approaches or a reinforcement of previously consolidated approaches.

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O presente relatório foi realizado no âmbito da Unidade Curricular de Prática de Ensino Supervisionada (PES), integrada no curso de Mestrado em Educação Pré-escolar (EPE) e Ensino do 1.º Ciclo do Ensino Básico (1.º CEB) e desenvolvida em contexto de Educação Pré-escolar, numa Instituição Particular de Solidariedade Social, com crianças de 3 anos de idade e em contexto do 1.º Ciclo do Ensino Básico, numa escola da rede pública com um grupo/turma de crianças de 5 e 6 anos de idade. A prática foi desenvolvida nos dois contextos, e os dados foram retirados no decorrer das intervenções realizadas através da observação direta e participante, sendo que para a recolha de dados recorremos a notas de campo, registos fotográficos e de áudio e, ainda, às produções das crianças, com a intencionalidade de nos servirem como documentos de análise. Ao longo do processo fomos também realizando registos numa grelha de observação, adaptada de Viana e Ribeiro (2014), para podermos compreender a evolução das crianças no desenvolvimento das suas competências (meta)linguísticas. Partimos da questão-problema: Que estratégias de aprendizagem se podem desenvolver em contexto de Educação Pré-escolar e de 1.º Ciclo Ensino Básico, no sentido de desenvolver competências (meta)linguísticas? Considerando esta interrogação estabelecemos como objetivo: (i) Promover o desenvolvimento linguístico e metalinguístico das crianças num contexto geral de comunicação (oralidade, escrita e leitura). O estudo ajusta-se a uma abordagem qualitativa. Para que fosse possível recolhermos a informação para a presente investigação foi necessário selecionarmos um conjunto de técnicas e de instrumentos de recolha de dados. Durante as atividades que desenvolvemos proporcionamos um ambiente positivo, facilitador da exploração de situações diversificadas de escrita e leitura e propiciamos, também, oportunidades para que cada criança fosse ouvida, respeitada e integrada. Em termos de resultados pensamos poder concluir que nos dois contextos atendemos aos interesses e motivações das crianças, de modo a promover estratégias de aprendizagens de forma a desenvolver competências (meta)linguísticas, como se comprova pela análise dos dados obtidos através das grelhas de observação, bem como nas experiências de ensino e aprendizagem que integramos neste documento e que também dão conta do processo vivenciado ao longo da Prática de Ensino Supervisionada.

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Purpose: Nurses and nursing students are often first responders to in-hospital cardiac arrest events; thus they are expected to perform Basic Life Support (BLS) and use an automated external defibrillator (AED) without delay. The aim of this study was to explore the relationship between nursing students’ self-efficacy and performance before and after receiving a particular training intervention in BLS/AED. Materials and methods: Explanatory correlational study. 177 nursing students received a 4-h training session in BLS/AED after being randomized to either a self-directed (SDG) or an instructor-directed teaching group (IDG).1 A validated self-efficacy scale, the Cardiff Test and Laerdal SkillReporter® software were used to assess students’ self-efficacy and performance in BLS/AED at pre-test, post-test and 3-month retention-test. Independent t-test analysis was performed to compare the differences between groups at pre-test. Pearson coefficient (r) was used to calculate the strength of the relationship between self-efficacy and performance in both groups at pre-test, post-test and retention-test. Results: Independent t-tests analysis showed that there were non-significant differences (p-values > 0.05) between groups for any of the variables measured. At pre-test, results showed that correlation between self-efficacy and performance was moderate for the IDG (r = 0.53; p < 0.05) and the SDG (r = 0.49; p < 0.05). At post-test, correlation between self-efficacy and performance was much higher for the SDG (r = 0.81; p < 0.05) than for the IDG (r = 0.32; p < 0.05), which in fact was weaker than at pre-test. Finally, it was found that whereas the correlation between self-efficacy and performance increased from the post-test to the retention-test to almost reach baseline levels for the ILG (r = 0.52; p < 0.05), it slightly decreased in this phase for the SDG (r = 0.77; p < 0.05). Conclusion: Student-directed strategies may be more effective than instructor-directed strategies at promoting self-assessment and, therefore, may help to improve and maintain the relationship between nursing student self-efficacy and actual ability to perform BLS/AED.